We won’t give the address for fear of being accused of helping
the terrorists, other than to say it is in midtown.
The Relevance of Bernie. Although
indicted and disgraced, Bernie Kerik still thinks people care about
his opinions.
Here are excerpts from an e-mail he sent on Dec.30 to his 1,000 closest
friends
…. “I think it is important for us to remember that
we are still a country at war and we still face serious threats against
our national security.
… ”The successes by General David Patraeus and his troops
in Iraq are continuing … Unfortunately, his achievements have
gone almost unnoticed by the general public here in the United States …He
was definitely the right man for the job.
… “With Al Qaeda claiming responsibility for the assassination
of Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan, Osama Bin Laden’s renewed threats
against Israel and Iran’s announcement that their first atomic
power plant will start operating in mid-2008, we can’t put our
guard down for even a second.
… “The enemies in this war against the United States
and those countries that live in freedom around the world are still
out there. … the thought of Pakistan’s nuclear capability
falling into the hands of Al-Quaeda is chilling and the thought of
Iran having nuclear capability is even worse.
…”This is definitely not the time to lose sight of what
happened on Sept 11, 2001; who was responsible then and who our enemies
are today.”
So who’s interested in what Benie has to say? Rudy Giuliani?
Fox News?
The Sleeper. So Counter Terrorism
Assistant Chief John Colgan lives like a guy in an SRO, sleeping
weeknights on a cot in a converted police storeroom in Brooklyn,
according to a report in the News. If true, he is flouting the
city’s residency rules, which require him to have a local
address within the city or in the five surrounding counties.
Apparently, the police department is allowing Colgan to break these
rules by providing these accommodations, as pathetic as they are. Department
spokesman Paul Browne — Mr Truth — says Colgan is so hard-working
he sometimes sleeps in his office, even though he has a residence in
Brooklyn. According to the News, it’s his parents, not Colgan,
who live in that apartment.
Perhaps the News and Internal Affairs should also look into whether
Colgan flouted city laws when he returned to the NYPD in 2002.
Colgan filed for retirement when Kerik became commissioner in 2000
and fired Colgan’s boss, then Deputy Commissioner of Management
and Budget Joe Wuensch. In his autobiography, Kerik said he was upset
that police precincts were filthy and complained Wuensch couldn’t
get anything done. Colgan then an inspector, was Wuensch’s commanding
officer.
When Kelly returned as commissioner in 2002, Wuensch returned as
his chief of staff. Colgan followed. Now here is where it gets interesting.
When an officer retires, he has a year to change his mind but must
pass a physical to return. But sources say Colgan never took the physical.
Colgan did not return a call. [To be continued.]